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The Tampa Bay Lightning lost Game 1 of their playoff series to the Montreal Canadiens, with Juraj Slafkovsky scoring a hat trick, including the overtime winner. Jon Cooper stated the loss is 'on us.'
Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images
The Montreal Canadiens got five chances with the power play in Game 1 of their first-round playoff series against the Tampa Bay Lightning on Sunday.
Juraj Slafkovsky scored on three of them.
Slafkovskyâs natural hat trick culminated with his power-play goal 82 seconds into overtime to give the Canadiens a 4-3 win and a 1-0 series lead against the Lightning.
Tampa Bay, which has lost its past three Game 1s after the Florida Panthers won the previous two, tied the score midway through the third.
But a high-sticking call on Jake Guentzel gave Montrealâs momentum-changing power play another chance 21 seconds before the end of regulation.
Slafkovskyâs first power-play goal came in the second and tied the score at 2 after Tampa Bay scored twice in 29 seconds.
His second gave Montreal a 3-2 lead at 5:56 of the third.
His third, which beat Andrei Vasilevskiy from the left circle, won the thing.
âIt was pretty nice, nice feeling,â Slafkovsky said. âBut we donât want to go to overtime. Hopefully, we can close out games before that.ââ
After the game, Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said his team just cannot give Montreal that many key chances.
Not in the playoffs, anyway.
Montreal had the leagueâs 10th best power play during the regular season at 23.1 percent.
The final score was 4-3 in favor of the Montreal Canadiens.
Juraj Slafkovsky scored the overtime goal for the Canadiens.
The Canadiens had five power play opportunities in Game 1.
Jon Cooper stated that the loss is 'on us.'

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The Lightningâs penalty kill was third with an 82.6 percent success rate, but as Cooper noted, this is was not some random game in February.
âI had a problem with us,ââ Cooper said, âI mean, we took four offensive zone penalties. Just look at them, thatâs not over-aggression; thatâs like stupidity on a lot of them.
âThatâs on us. That is a game where we just gave them an opportunity to win. This is the Stanley Cup playoffs. This isnât Game 62. Thatâs extremely disappointing in the way we conducted ourselves.ââ
One thing Sunday did show us was this series could be a classic.
Those worried that the young Canadiens could not hang with a more experienced (and heavier) team like the Lightning were shown otherwise at least in Game 1.
Per the stat sheet, Montreal had two fewer hits (44-42) but did not back down from anything.
Josh Anderson gave the Canadiens the initial lead at 13:24 of the first period and was tied for second on his team with four hits in the game.
Anderson and Yanni Gourde both went to the box for roughing and when Anderson came out, he deflected a Mike Matheson shot in for what looked like a 2-0 lead.
Only the goal came off for the use of a high stick.
Moments later, Anderson hit Charle-Edouard DâAstous hard behind the net leading to a charging penalty.
That fired the Lightning up, leading to its two-goal run which made it 2-1.
Darren Raddysh tied the score on the Andersonâs charing power play chance at 12:15 of the second before Brandon Hagel got his first of the night on the next shift for a 2-1 lead.
Montreal did not go away, however, getting a power play late in the second on a Conor Geekie high stick. Slafkovsky got his second to tie it.
âNot going to lie, that was hard,ââ Anderson said. âDidnât expect to have that many penalties, it kind of took away from the momentum of the game. But we kind of stuck to it. I thought the penalty kill did a good job, the power play did a good job.ââ
The Lightning will try and get out of this 0-1 hole for a third straight year on Tuesday in Tampa.
Montreal got what it came south for with at least a split going back home for Game 3.
âListen, Game 1s are Game 1s,ââ Cooper said. âI have been part of series where we won them and lost the series, lost them and won the series, and everything in between. That isnât as much of a concern as to how we lost it.
âSo, if thatâs going to be the way we keep going, this series may not go as long as we thought. âŠ
âUltimately, weâre down 1-0 and have to win four of the next six. There have been taller tasks. Gosh, Iâve been in series where we lost the first two and came back to win. So, this is by no means do-or-die. But sitting here, 15 minutes after the game, youâre a little ticked off.â
GAME 2
Canadiens lead Best-of-7 Series 1-0
This article: Jon Cooper: Lightning Game 1 Loss to Canadiens is âOn Usâ originally appeared on Florida Hockey Now.